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Ipswich murder: Teenager charged after man fatally stabbed in Christmas tragedy

Ipswich murder: Teenager charged after man fatally stabbed in Christmas tragedy

Daily Mirror6 days ago
A teenager has been charged with the murder of a "larger than life character with a heart of gold" - more than six months after he was stabbed to death.
Although William McNicholl, 63, was found dead on January 1, it is thought he was attacked on or around Christmas Day last year. A post-mortem examination found he died from a single stab wound and multiple head injuries.
Jake McMillan was arrested on suspicion of murder in January but was bailed with conditions and, yesterday, the 18-year-old man was re-arrested on suspicion of murder and charged. The teenager, also charged with being concerned in the supply of cannabis, will appear at Ipswich Magistrates' Court today.
Mr McNicholl, who was also known as Billy and Electric Bill, remembered him as a "cheeky geeza with a fun sense of humour". Speaking in January, his family, from Ipswich, said: "Love him or hate him, the man with many names who meant lots of different things to different people, was cool, clever and eccentric. His friends, five nieces and sister remember him as kind and generous, even when he didn't have much himself – he was a larger than life character with a heart of gold."
McMillan, who used to live in Ipswich but since moved to Hackney, east London, is one of several people arrested in connection with the investigation in the previous six months. On April 1, a further three people were arrested as part of the probe.
The 17-year-old boy, 18-year-old man and 41-year-old man were detained on suspicion of assisting an offender and being concerned in the supply of Class A and B drugs. They were taken to a police station in Ipswich for questioning and were subsequently bailed to return to police on October 1.
A woman aged in her 50s, who was previously arrested on suspicion of murder before being released on bail, has been told she will face no further action, Suffolk Police told the media today.
It is unclear whether Mr McNicholl knew McMillan or not. However, there were no signs of forced entry in the Ipswich home, officers say. Mr McNicholl, who loved his dogs, including his Staffordshire Bull Terrier, Leo, was using social media on December 25, and no later, the investigation has found.
Mr McNicholl, who was also a "whizz at a Rubik's Cube", was a well known personality in Ipswich in the 1970s having moved to the area from London. He was involved in political protests, including one opposed to the introduction of the poll tax, and was heavily integrated in the punk music scene in Suffolk.
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‘My dad was a monster but she's a sick psycho,' says Fred & Rose West's son of parents' vile abuse in unheard interview
‘My dad was a monster but she's a sick psycho,' says Fred & Rose West's son of parents' vile abuse in unheard interview

Scottish Sun

timea day ago

  • Scottish Sun

‘My dad was a monster but she's a sick psycho,' says Fred & Rose West's son of parents' vile abuse in unheard interview

A FORGOTTEN interview with the son of evil serial killers Fred and Rose West has revealed the torture he suffered at the hands of his parents. This includes sleeping above the bodies of their victims buried under the cellar. 9 Mugshots of evil killers Fred and Rose West, who were arrested in 1994 Credit: PA:Press Association Images 9 The Wests' 'house of horrors' in Cromwell Street, Gloucester Credit: PA:Press Association 9 The victims were found buried in the creepy cellar Credit: SWNS:South West News Service The previously unpublished accounts of Barry West give a harrowing insight into what it was like growing up in Britain's House of Horrors. Fred and Rose West between them committed at least 12 murders of girls and young women between 1967 and 1987 in Gloucestershire. In 1994 the couple were arrested and charged - with Fred taking his own life the following January in prison, while Rose was sentenced to 10 life terms with a whole life order. Journalist and author Howard Sounes has shared his unearthed interview with Barry, two years before he died of an overdose in 2020, aged 40, for the first time. 'My dad was a solid monster,' Barry told Sounes, reports The Mirror. 'But she [Rose] was a complete psycho. That's what people don't know: My mum was, child abuse-wise, the main person. "My mum was completely sick in the head. She beat me way more than my dad did, and enjoyed it, absolutely enjoyed it.' The West children were made to sleep in the cellar of the family's home in Cromwell Street, Gloucester, under which they buried many of their victims. Sometimes they were strapped to their beds - and Rose wore a the cellar keys around her neck like a prison guard. The evil mum would regularly snap and lash out - hitting and slapping, as well as stabbing and strangling her kids. Her weapon of choice was often a novelty giant wooden spoon, which she'd wield like a baseball bat. Pathetic last days of Rose West revealed as serial killer monster can barely walk, has no friends & has new fake identity Barry told Sounes his nose is "on a slant" due to the amount of times Rose broke it, and has "massive scars" on the back of his head where he was struck over and over again. He went on to describe the "intense enjoyment" his mum got out of "beating the s*** out of me". Barry recalls how one Christmas Day he hid some sprouts in a tissue on the back of a chair, and when Rose found them days later she forced him to eat the rotting vegetables. He said she put her hand over his mouth and made him swallow his own sick. Barry and his brothers were forced to grow their hair long and wore their sisters' hand-me-downs to school - while their sisters were made to cut their hair short and wear boys' shoes. He said he and all his siblings had speech impediments growing up, a sign of child abuse. Barry would get his "face punched in" at school every day, but was scared to go home. He recalled how Fred would constantly talk about sex in front of his kids and about wanting to take his daughters' virginity, as well as the family tradition of incest, and sex with animals. 9 The Wests forced their kids to sleep in the cellar 9 Rose took joy in beating her children Credit: PA:Press Association 9 Police digging up the garden at the property in Gloucester, where their victims were buried Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd Fred's main ambition was to see Rose mounted by a bull. Barry said he was forced into sexual situations with his mum aged eight or nine. The kids were often forced to make phone bookings for "Mandy" - Rose's prostitute alias, and Barry was even offered as an extra for clients. A "giant man" became a regular who would rape Barry at the house. He said the children were even made to watch homemade porn featuring their mum and she kept different underwear in labelled jars for each client. There is a chance, according to some reports, that Fred was not Barry's biological father at all, and he was the product of an incestuous relationship between Rose and her own dad Bill Letts. He had allegedly abused her since she was a child, and regularly visited the Cromwell Street house, according to Rose's notes from prison. The Wests' murder victims were usually attacked and killed, then often dismembered in the family bathroom. Most of their children maintained they had no idea what was going on. One child, who Sounes does not identify, however, claimed years later they were locked in a cupboard under the stairs and could hear shouting and screaming. When they came out, fresh concrete had been poured in the cellar, they claimed. Barry said the children didn't run away because they considered their dad "like God" who would "find you". His older sister Heather vanished aged 16 in 1987 after saying she wanted to leave the house - before later being found dismembered under the patio. It was a long-running family "joke" that Heather was buried in the garden which became a sick reality when police diggers later moved in. However, Barry recalled how he once tried to kill Fred with a screwdriver when he was 11, but his dad just laughed at him. But they did get some revenge on Rose by banding together as she came at them with the wooden spoon. It was when the police investigation had begun into the Wests had begun and just before the children were put into care. They piled on top of their mum and she hit them until she was "knackered" and then "broke down", with Barry saying it was the first time they "saw weakness". 9 The house was eventually demolished Credit: PA:Press Association 9 Fred took his own life in prison prior to being sentenced and Rose continues to serve a whole life order Credit: Rex Features

Brother who killed sister with hammer detained indefinitely
Brother who killed sister with hammer detained indefinitely

Leader Live

time2 days ago

  • Leader Live

Brother who killed sister with hammer detained indefinitely

Richard Law, 68, used a hammer to repeatedly bludgeon his sister Judith, 70, at their home in Newton Poppleford, Devon, in January this year. Exeter Crown Court heard the siblings were reclusive and at the time of the Miss Law's death there was an 'inter-related spiral of mental decline'. Jo Martin KC, prosecuting, said on the afternoon of January 17, Law phoned 999 and told the operator: 'I've killed my sister, and so I need you to come. 'We've both gone mad, I mean, mentally. I just couldn't cope with it all.' The emergency services found Miss Law dead in her bed having suffered severe head injuries. 'He told the police there had been a build up from Christmas Day, although there had been no big argument,' Miss Martin said. 'He said, 'I kept hitting her to make sure because I didn't want to leave her. She wanted to die, the same as I did'. 'He went on to say, 'Part of my problem is being reclusive and withdrawn. The last thing you want to do is go to counselling or go to the doctor'.' After being taken to the police station Law told officers he had intended to take his own life and was detained under the Mental Health Act. A post-mortem examination found Miss Law had suffered 'catastrophic head injuries' from at least six blows from a hammer. Police investigations found the siblings led quiet but separate lives, despite sharing their former parents' home. 'They were not well known to their neighbours,' Miss Martin said. 'What though did seem to be known of the two of them was they didn't have a particularly good sibling relationship. 'They led independent lives to the extent that they would shop and eat separately. 'When the police spoke to all of the friends and neighbours, it was clear that despite what they knew of their fraught relationship, no one had anticipated it would end in the killing of Judith by her brother.' Miss Martin said Law told psychiatrists that both he and his sister spoke of suicide and that he was becoming 'increasingly stressed'. 'On January 17 he said that they'd had a conversation about how long it would take them both to rot if they just stayed in bed and didn't eat,' she said. 'He said that he recalled thinking that this was the day to end their lives.' Law, of Lark Rise, Newton Poppleford, had previously been charged with murder but pleaded guilty to manslaughter by reason of diminished responsibility. Two psychiatrists found he had been suffering from a 'severe depressive disorder' which had affected his culpability. Dan Pawson-Pounds, defending, said tensions between the siblings had exacerbated after their village had flooded in 2023 and their home needed repairs. 'The characterisation of the relationship between Mr Law and his sister is a difficult one because of course they were both relatively reclusive, Mr Law rather more than his sister,' he said. 'It appears that Mr Law's reclusive nature was a longstanding character trait developed over a number of years and was identifiable from the latest the mid-1990s. 'The knowledge of the neighbours and others of their relationship was naturally and inevitably somewhat limited. 'We would say that whilst there were clear tensions in that relationship, and those tensions were obviously exacerbated by the flood damage to their home and the ongoing repair work in 2023, it does appear that the balance of the observations taken from third parties is that while they lived their lives largely separately under the same roof, there was no suggestion of any violence at all between them.' Judge Anna Richardson imposed a hospital order under Section 37 of the Mental Health Act and a restriction order under Section 41 – meaning Law can be detained indefinitely. 'On January 17 this year you rang 999 telling the operator that you had killed your sister, that you had struck her with a hammer more than once, and that you had both gone mad,' she said. 'You exhibited substantial signs of disturbance in your manner during that call. 'You have since told medical experts that your intention was to kill Judith and yourself, but you were unable to go through with killing yourself. 'I accept that you are genuinely remorseful. 'I have concluded that the protection of the public is not best served by passing a penal sentence which would be of relatively short duration. 'Rather the justice of the case and the public are better served by the making of a hospital order under Section 37 of the Mental Health Act. 'I am satisfied that you are suffering from a mental disorder of a nature and degree which makes it appropriate for you to be detained in hospital for medical treatment.'

Brother who killed sister with hammer detained indefinitely
Brother who killed sister with hammer detained indefinitely

Rhyl Journal

time2 days ago

  • Rhyl Journal

Brother who killed sister with hammer detained indefinitely

Richard Law, 68, used a hammer to repeatedly bludgeon his sister Judith, 70, at their home in Newton Poppleford, Devon, in January this year. Exeter Crown Court heard the siblings were reclusive and at the time of the Miss Law's death there was an 'inter-related spiral of mental decline'. Jo Martin KC, prosecuting, said on the afternoon of January 17, Law phoned 999 and told the operator: 'I've killed my sister, and so I need you to come. 'We've both gone mad, I mean, mentally. I just couldn't cope with it all.' The emergency services found Miss Law dead in her bed having suffered severe head injuries. 'He told the police there had been a build up from Christmas Day, although there had been no big argument,' Miss Martin said. 'He said, 'I kept hitting her to make sure because I didn't want to leave her. She wanted to die, the same as I did'. 'He went on to say, 'Part of my problem is being reclusive and withdrawn. The last thing you want to do is go to counselling or go to the doctor'.' After being taken to the police station Law told officers he had intended to take his own life and was detained under the Mental Health Act. A post-mortem examination found Miss Law had suffered 'catastrophic head injuries' from at least six blows from a hammer. Police investigations found the siblings led quiet but separate lives, despite sharing their former parents' home. 'They were not well known to their neighbours,' Miss Martin said. 'What though did seem to be known of the two of them was they didn't have a particularly good sibling relationship. 'They led independent lives to the extent that they would shop and eat separately. 'When the police spoke to all of the friends and neighbours, it was clear that despite what they knew of their fraught relationship, no one had anticipated it would end in the killing of Judith by her brother.' Miss Martin said Law told psychiatrists that both he and his sister spoke of suicide and that he was becoming 'increasingly stressed'. 'On January 17 he said that they'd had a conversation about how long it would take them both to rot if they just stayed in bed and didn't eat,' she said. 'He said that he recalled thinking that this was the day to end their lives.' Law, of Lark Rise, Newton Poppleford, had previously been charged with murder but pleaded guilty to manslaughter by reason of diminished responsibility. Two psychiatrists found he had been suffering from a 'severe depressive disorder' which had affected his culpability. Dan Pawson-Pounds, defending, said tensions between the siblings had exacerbated after their village had flooded in 2023 and their home needed repairs. 'The characterisation of the relationship between Mr Law and his sister is a difficult one because of course they were both relatively reclusive, Mr Law rather more than his sister,' he said. 'It appears that Mr Law's reclusive nature was a longstanding character trait developed over a number of years and was identifiable from the latest the mid-1990s. 'The knowledge of the neighbours and others of their relationship was naturally and inevitably somewhat limited. 'We would say that whilst there were clear tensions in that relationship, and those tensions were obviously exacerbated by the flood damage to their home and the ongoing repair work in 2023, it does appear that the balance of the observations taken from third parties is that while they lived their lives largely separately under the same roof, there was no suggestion of any violence at all between them.' Judge Anna Richardson imposed a hospital order under Section 37 of the Mental Health Act and a restriction order under Section 41 – meaning Law can be detained indefinitely. 'On January 17 this year you rang 999 telling the operator that you had killed your sister, that you had struck her with a hammer more than once, and that you had both gone mad,' she said. 'You exhibited substantial signs of disturbance in your manner during that call. 'You have since told medical experts that your intention was to kill Judith and yourself, but you were unable to go through with killing yourself. 'I accept that you are genuinely remorseful. 'I have concluded that the protection of the public is not best served by passing a penal sentence which would be of relatively short duration. 'Rather the justice of the case and the public are better served by the making of a hospital order under Section 37 of the Mental Health Act. 'I am satisfied that you are suffering from a mental disorder of a nature and degree which makes it appropriate for you to be detained in hospital for medical treatment.'

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